Streaks are at stake
Patrick Laverty
Costa Mesa High and Estancia will begin Golden West League play in
girls basketball tonight with the hope of keeping a pair of
historical streaks alive.
The Mustangs (5-6) need at least six victories to qualify for the
CIF Southern Section playoffs, something they have done in each of
the last 14 seasons.
Estancia (3-10) will be looking for a few more victories than that
as it attempts to win its third straight league championship and
second Golden West League title in a row.
Both streaks are in jeopardy as the undersized Mustangs and the
inconsistent Eagles will have to knock off Ocean View, Saddleback and
Westminster, who should all join the battle for the top spot in
league.
“We’re playing pretty well. We’re doing about as much as we can
do,” Mesa Coach Jim Weeks said. “We don’t have a great player like
Saddleback and Estancia and we’re giving up so much height to Ocean
View and Westminster.”
The Seahawks (9-1) and their balanced scoring attack enter the
league season as one of the favorites and will play host to Estancia
tonight at 7. Senior Tanisha Lewis, averaging 26.6 points per game,
leads Saddleback, which visits Costa Mesa in the opener tonight at 7.
Ocean View sports 6-foot-2 freshman D.J. Butler and won the
Century tournament and finished third in the Satana/Horsman Christmas
Classic.
Saddleback is led by Lewis -- “If you contain her, you’ve got a
chance,” Weeks said. -- while Westminster, which won five straight
league championships before Estancia grabbed the title last season,
can present problems with its height.
The Mustangs will need victories over Santa Ana and Orange,
expected to finish near the bottom of the league standings, and at
least one upset to meet the 11-win requirement for playoff
qualification. If the Mustangs can’t knock off Avalon in a nonleague
home game Saturday or fall to either Orange or Santa Ana, at least
two upsets in league would be required.
Whether the Mustangs are capable of such could be determined
early, as their season opener against Saddleback is followed by a
date with Ocean View.
“We’ll find out how we’re going to play,” Weeks said. “If we play
them tight then I think we’ll be all right.”
Senior Susy Trujillo, among the Mustangs’ tallest starters at
5-foot-6, leads Mesa in scoring with 13.3 points per game, while 5-3
senior point guard Cassey Brick has added 8.7 points, 5.5 rebounds
and 4.5 assists.
Much of Mesa’s success will be dictated by its three-point
shooting, the Mustangs are averaging more than six three-pointers a
game.
Estancia is led by 5-4 senior point guard Trisha Wase, who is
averaging nine assists per game, and 5-10 senior Nancy Castro,
averaging 15 points and 10 rebounds. Krystal Mino provides tough
defense, with five steals per game, and Imelda Pena is a consistent
threat behind the three-point arc.
But Wase will likely determine if the Eagles can earn their third
straight league championship after grabbing the Pacific Coast League
title two years ago and running through the Golden West League
undefeated last season.
“Trisha is just a remarkable point guard,” Weeks said. “She can do
anything she wants to do.”
The Eagles’ record is a bit misleading having easily played the
most difficult nonleague schedule in the league. They entered league
play last season with a 5-8 mark and a seven-game losing streak, but
didn’t lose again until the second round of the playoffs.
“When we go into league, they’re a totally different team,”
Estancia Coach Tami Rappa said. “They’re confidence is always there.
But I always tell them, ‘Winning’s a habit and so is losing.’ ”
The key for the Eagles is playing consistently. They have yet to
do so this season, and that has been their biggest problem.
“We can beat anybody,” Rappa said. “I still believe that we’re a
great team. I still believe that.”
The Eagles, and the rest of the league, will find out, beginning
tonight.
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